Wuthering Heights (Illustrated)

Wuthering Heights (Illustrated)

by Emily Brontë
Wuthering Heights (Illustrated)

Wuthering Heights (Illustrated)

by Emily Brontë

eBook

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Overview

Wuthering Heights was published in 1847 under the pseudonym "Ellis Bell"; Brontë died the following year, aged 30. Wuthering Heights and Anne Brontë's Agnes Grey were accepted publisher Thomas New before the success of their sister Charlotte's novel, Jane Eyre. After Emily's death, Charlotte edited the manuscript of Wuthering Heights, and arranged for the edited version to be published as a posthumous second edition in 1850. Although Wuthering Heights is now widely regarded as a classic of English literature, contemporary reviews for the novel were deeply polarised; it was considered controversial because its depiction of mental and physical cruelty was unusually stark, and it challenged strict Victorian ideals of the day, including religious hypocrisy, morality, social classes and gender inequality. The English poet and painter Dante Gabriel Rossetti referred to it as "A fiend of a book - an incredible monster. The action is laid in hell, - only it seems places and people have English names there." The book has inspired adaptations, including film, radio and television dramatisations, a musical Bernard J. Taylor, a ballet, operas, a role-playing game, and a 1978 song Kate Bush.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781088274002
Publisher: Treasureword
Publication date: 08/25/2023
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 330
File size: 2 MB

About the Author

Emily Brontë was born in 1818, the daughter of a curate. She was the most enigmatic of the three famous novelist sisters. Losing her mother very early in her life and following her elder sister Charlotte to school, she found life away from the Haworth parsonage extremely hard. Her time as a teacher at Law Hill School near Halifax was similarly trying. Homesickness drew her back to the moors and the life of a reclusive author. It was there, in 1848, that she died of tuberculosis just months after her brother Branwell. Few of her papers survive and her reputation is based on a few surviving poems and one novel, Wuthering Heights.
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